Women’s volleyball Wolves win hard battle against George Brown

The Algonquin Wolves women’s volleyball team won its second game of the season with a hard-fought 3-1 win over the George Brown Huskies on Oct. 28. Coming out of a […]
Photo: Kerry Slack
Maddy Nadeau sets up her spike for the point on Oct. 28 against the George Brown Huskies.

The Algonquin Wolves women’s volleyball team won its second game of the season with a hard-fought 3-1 win over the George Brown Huskies on Oct. 28.

Coming out of a win over La Cité, the Wolves started strong against the Huskies, winning the first set 25-15.

Outside hitter Maddy Nadeau and right side Natasha Lauzon put many points down with the help of clutch senior players, setter Gabby Paquette and team captain Emilie Menard.

The second set saw the Wolves dominate most of the set with some new players getting court time.

New player, Chloe Rodgers puts one down with Gabby Paquette backing her up.
New player, Chloe Rodgers, puts one down with Gabby Paquette backing her up. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

Middle hitter Isabella Tourangeau and middle Chloe Rodgers both made kill shots to the delight of the thunderous crowd.

The Huskies wouldn’t let this set go easily and they kept putting just enough down to keep the game interesting.

The Wolves took the set 25-19.

The Huskies won the third set 25- 22. It was point-for-point until late in the set.

Captain Emilie Menard is a steady force behind her team.
Captain Emilie Menard is a steady force behind her team. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

“We started out hot. We just kind of took our foot off the gas,” said Wolves head coach Everton Senior.

“I don’t know if it was nerves or what, but we just want to execute it at the same level, which is disappointing, but that’s sports.”

Continuous wise words and direction from Senior couldn’t turn the set around.

“I’ve just got to do the best I can listen to my coach,” said Tourangeau.

Clawing for the win, the Wolves brought the fight back in the fourth set, winning it 25-19.

Captain Emilie Menard guards her hitter.
Faith Billany with a point for the Wolves Photo credit: Kerry Slack

Serving ace after ace, Nathasha Lauzon played a big role in scoring, keeping the serve and being a continuous backup and support for the new players.

“We can’t allow the player hot streaks and if they do, not let it kill us mentally,” said Lauzon.

Skimming by Paquette and Rodgers, it's Lauzon saves the ball.
Skimming by Paquette and Rodgers, it's Lauzon saves the ball. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

“We had a little bit of adversity with the way we were playing, but we came through it,” said Senior.

“Leading into next week we got some new people some court time which is awesome, hopefully, next time they’re called on they won’t feel as nervous. It might be a big moment and will be ready to go,” said Senior.

Now 2-0 in the season, the Wolves will face off against George Brown again on Nov. 10 in an away game. But first, the Wolves will take on Loyalist on Nov. 3 and Canadore on Nov. 4 at Jack Doyle Recreation Centre.

Wolves claw their way to beat the Huskies 3-2 in men’s volleyball

Fighting their way through five tough sets, the Algonquin Wolves men’s volleyball team beat the George Brown Huskies 3-2 on Oct. 28. After the Wolves decimated the Huskies in November […]
Photo: Kerry Slack
Wolves left-side hitter Mahmoud Abdelaziz spikes the ball for a point against the George Brown Huskies on Oct. 28

Fighting their way through five tough sets, the Algonquin Wolves men’s volleyball team beat the George Brown Huskies 3-2 on Oct. 28.

After the Wolves decimated the Huskies in November 2022, George Brown returned to Ottawa this month with a better game.

“Simply, they’ve improved this year,” said Wolves head coach Jelle Kooijmann.

“I think they have some really efficient players on the outside. It was hard for us to stop,” said Kooijmann.

The Wolves lost the first set 22-25 but came back strong in the second set, taking it 25-17.

The Wolves came out strong again in the third set, but the Huskies wouldn’t make it easy. The teams traded points almost the whole set, exciting the crowd.

“It’s a new season, right, so it’s like we all just got to pull together and play together,” said outside hitter Malcolm Spence.

The Wolves took the third set 25-21.

Outside hotter Jeff Commerford with one of many spikes in a five-set game against George brown Oct. 28
Wolves outside hitter Jeff Commerford with one of many spikes in a five-set game against George Brown Oct. 28. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

The fourth set started as a nail-biter and ended the same way.

The teams went point-for-point until the Huskies put a few down at the end to win the set 23-25.

The fifth set was tight.

The Huskies crept ahead then the Wolves caught up.

Kooijmann called a time-out where he told his team, “You’ve got to be ready.”

“Don’t let them in,” he said.

Martin Jenega spikes the ball for one of many points against George Brown College on Oct. 28
The Wolves' Martin Jenega spikes the ball for one of his many points against George Brown College on Oct. 28. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

“I think they are a way better team than they were last year. As a lesson for the game against Loyalist next week,” said Kooijmann, “this team needs to remember to play full games.”

“The Huskies came out and, like, really fought and were really effective so I think the biggest thing we know is that this team is going to fight,” said Kooijmann.

The Wolves took the final set 15-12 for the 3-2 win.

Connor Finnie came sin clutch against George Brown Oct. 28.
Connor Finnie came sin clutch against George Brown Oct. 28. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

“We need control on our side and transition offense,” said left-side Mahmoud Abdelaziz.

“That’s what I’m going to take away from tonight’s game.”

The Wolves will be back in action against Loyalist on Nov. 3 and Canadore on Nov. 4, both at the Jack Doyle Athletics and Recreation Centre.

Connections chooses refugee chocolatier for co-branding opportunity

“I was born because of a box of chocolate,” explains Tareq Hadhad, the co-founder of Peace By Chocolate, in an interview on CBC Gem. His father gave his mother a […]
Photo: Brahim Ait Ouzineb
“We’ve heard about their excellent quality chocolate,” says Ashish Talwar, the Connections-Campus Store manager. “There’s also a good story behind. We have sold half of our inventory, and we are reordering.”

“I was born because of a box of chocolate,” explains Tareq Hadhad, the co-founder of Peace By Chocolate, in an interview on CBC Gem. His father gave his mother a box of chocolates to ask her for marriage.

You may have heard Green Party Leader Elizabeth May gave a “Peace Bar” to U.S. President Joe Biden during his March visit to Canada. You may have watched the 2021 movie Peace By Chocolate. You may have heard this chocolate brand made a special shipment to the international space station in 2018.

Well, this chocolate is available in Connections – The Campus Store.

“We’ve heard about their excellent quality chocolate,” says Ashish Talwar, the store manager. “There’s also a good story behind. We have sold half of our inventory, and we are reordering.”

The Hadhad family settled in Antigonish, N.S. as refugees in 2016. Now their company is the major job creator in the town. Beyond Antigonish, the company is committing to hire 50 refugees in its facilities across Canada and mentor 10 startups run by refugees. Up to September 2023, it had raised over $552,000 and donated it to the Peace on Earth Society. Their website showcases all types of supportive partnerships, including those relating to wildfires and war victims.

For the Hadhad family, chocolate is food to the body and the soul. It plays a role in the well-being of refugees, just like music. Chocolate offers a sense of connection and familiarity in a place where everything is a new experience.

The success of this chocolate owes much to the faculty and staff. Students can opt for a budget-friendly gift to their friends or guest speakers, such as a mug and chocolate bar combo for under $15.

“We’ve heard about their excellent quality chocolate,” says Ashish Talwar, the Connections-Campus Store manager. “There’s also a good story behind. We have sold half of our inventory, and we are reordering.”
“We’ve heard about their excellent quality chocolate,” says Ashish Talwar, the Connections-Campus Store manager. “There’s also a good story behind. We have sold half of our inventory, and we are reordering.” Photo credit: Brahim Ait Ouzineb

“Last year, we were able to offer a discount on customer appreciation day. We will do the same thing in this year at Christmas time,” says Talwar.

The college store had the chocolate last November since the community appreciates local products. Connections sought to collaborate with Peace By Chocolate (PBC) due to the heartwarming family story and the quality standards.

“With this company, there is no high minimum in our orders,” says Talwar.

In contrast, other companies often have a minimum order and tack on extra fees for adding the logo, leaving the campus store with a slim profit margin.

PBC would package and brand the chocolate with the name of Algonquin College at no additional costs. Through a partnership with Algonquin College, PBC would increase awareness about further potential collaboration with academic institutions across Canada.

“We chose Algonquin College for its commitment to education and its support for newcomers from different backgrounds, making it an ideal partner to achieve these objectives,” says Hadhad.

For Hadhad, this partnership also aims to help refugee and immigrant students on campus feel the connection between them and PBC’s story of new beginnings and second chances.

“We are not only telling our story but also the positive narrative of a welcoming culture and the great return of offering newcomers a sense of belonging. It is about reflection and understanding that peace is the noblest value in the world,” says Hadhad.

Seneca runs Wolves ragged in men’s rugby

A chilled wind flowed through Ottawa’s Twin Elm Rugby Park, only made colder by light rain. The dirt covering those playing turned slowly to streaks of mud from the wet […]
Photo: Mathew Dicsi
An Algonquin Wolves player tries to break through the Seneca Sting's defensive line.

A chilled wind flowed through Ottawa’s Twin Elm Rugby Park, only made colder by light rain. The dirt covering those playing turned slowly to streaks of mud from the wet and sweat as they fought for a win. Raspy screams stayed consistent the whole game, saying “fall back!” and “10 feet!” as players throw each other across the pitch and in the air just for a touch of the ball.

On Oct. 21, the Algonquin Wolves faced the Seneca Sting in the Wolves’ final match of the season, resulting in 38-26 loss for the Wolves and four injuries.

“Algonquin was a hard-hitting team and you can see it in the injuries,” said Jon Jenkinson, a Seneca fan.

“We’ve just been working on our craft,” said Seneca captain Simeon Charles. “There have been certain things we have been saving for today, and we’ve been executing them very well.”

Wolves hooker Owen Gilmore was giving and receiving handshakes and high-fives from both teams.

“Everyone says rugby is a gentleman’s game,” said Gilmore. “I try to be nice to others and someone might buy you a pint after hours.”

“There’s no point being rude to another man playing the same sport, trying to do the same thing as you.”

Seneca player number 9 putting gauze to his wound after taking a cleat to the head.
A Seneca player presses gauze to his wound after taking a cleat to the head. Photo credit: Mathew Dicsi

Gilmore was checking on the injured from the Seneca Sting throughout the course of the game.

“Seneca was outstanding. It was unfortunate they had so many penalties, but it’s good to see these fellas get a win,” said Jenkinson.

“The penalties reflect the inexperience of the team.”

“When everyone is running hard, trying hard, playing hard, that’s when the injuries happen,” said Owen Jenkinson, another Seneca fan.

First person: learning to do hard things in the kitchen and beyond

One afternoon last September, I walked into my family’s kitchen and started to make dinner for them. I’d decided to make lasagna. As this was the first meal I’d cooked […]
"Over the last weeks and months I have steadily improved my cooking skills," says the author.

One afternoon last September, I walked into my family’s kitchen and started to make dinner for them. I’d decided to make lasagna. As this was the first meal I’d cooked for them, it felt wise to start with something on the simple side. I was excited, but tense. I’d never done this alone without my mother before.

She’d had to leave us for a few months to go back home to Lebanon. I was left in charge of cooking and taking care of my two younger sisters and older brother. I whipped out my phone to look up the steps required in my recipe and began to set out the ingredients I’d need. By having the items ready, I’d avoid rushing around the kitchen.

When I was younger, I used to watch YouTube videos that showed how to make specific recipes, including baking and cooking. My sister and I would “create” our own recipes by gathering various ingredients and putting them down on paper. We enjoyed making up fake recipes and storing all of our papers so that when we were older we could look through the box of papers and learn how to cook them together.

Back then, wanting to be an adult rather than a child was exciting to me. However, now that I’ve had to act like an adult and do things that grownups do, I’ve started to miss being a kid.

Up until that day in the kitchen, I’d been responsible for a lot of things, but being a “mother” to my siblings had not been one of them. While I had observed her doing the cooking and cleaning every day, it appeared simple. It didn’t take long for me to appreciate all that my mother has done for us. With almost no help from the four of us living at home.

However, I soon discovered the secret. Asking for help when facing a struggle is important since everyone starts out someplace and can accomplish difficult things if they put their minds to it.

One of the first people I asked for advice about how they accomplished things was Balkees Ayasrah, an Algonquin College student in the office administration program. She is attending school while taking care of her four year old child. This means she shoulders a lot of responsibilities as a mom while making sure that all of her schoolwork is completed on time.

I knew about the things Ayasrah was doing and juggling all by herself as a mother and a student, but it never really clicked until I was standing in her shoes.

“It’s really nice when you’re being put in tough situations like these because not only do they prepare you for the better but at least for me, it makes me feel stronger and good about myself,” said Ayasrah. “Knowing I could accomplish these kind of things that I thought I would never be able to while having my daughter by my side makes me feel like I’ve won. Every meal that comes out good is like an accomplishment.”

Ayasrah offered me advice on meal prep and helped me by providing me with simple recipes.

Ayasrah had done everything with the help of Google and YouTube. Plus, she had copied down her mother’s recipes and slowly practiced them with her. Even with little guidance, we still stress or make mistakes when doing anything for the first time.

She explained how it took her some hours to prepare a single meal for her first time. Before things got better for her, they were horrible. She explained how it took her six hours to finish a meal she was making by herself. She told me that I was standing where she and all the others had started.

As I slowly began to adjust, I would ask my sisters to help out around the house by doing at least one thing to make life a little easier for me. However, since I remember well how I felt when my mother when she called me for something, I don’t argue or respond when they say no on some days.

There will come a day when we all learn various life lessons in different ways. And I started learning when I was quite young. Learning is important but the only way we as humans can truly learn is through actually going through the experience. It’s different when someone tells you since you won’t experience it unless you’re actually in that situation.

Over the last weeks and months I have steadily improved my cooking skills. I’ve also learned how to set up a routine so I don’t try to juggle too many things at once, which is generally how I messed things up. My sisters have also gradually started to help without me having to ask.

The best and most surprisingly part of it is during these kinds of moments when they come and help me in the kitchen, because it feels like it’s straight from their hearts and not me having to “force” them into helping me. We end up chatting which makes times past fast in a good way. This has gradually transformed the tasks we hated into the things we liked.

Helping someone, especially our families, should always make us feel proud. They asked for help because they trust us to be there for them in any situation.

Having a family to cook for might make me moan at times, but it’s also a privilege to have a family to cook for. It’s comforting to know that I can rely on my siblings in times of need, even if I just get a little help from them. People in your life and those around you aren’t here forever.

Nothing will be perfect the first time or the second time, but the important thing is to keep trying because that will result in progress. In my case, it sure did bring me joy when I saw my family gradually enjoy my food.

They now even get excited for when ill prepare my next lasagna. As soon as I served them my first dinner, they fell in love. Now, they joke, I am the family’s one and only lasagna chef.

Students hope for new machines as maintenance temporarily closes residence laundry room

Students living in residence at Algonquin College all know the pain of laundry day. Between guessing which dryer won’t work by the amount of lint in the trap to slamming […]
Photo: Kit Gervais
“I know the rooms will be busy after they re-open," said resident Ren Chartrand.

Students living in residence at Algonquin College all know the pain of laundry day.

Between guessing which dryer won’t work by the amount of lint in the trap to slamming the washer door closed so the cycle finally starts — never mind the constant out-of-service machines — the laundry rooms are not ideal.

Students were relieved to hear that the machines would be under maintenance in an email sent out on Oct. 18. On the other hand, the maintenance meant students wouldn’t have access to residence laundry machines from Oct. 23 to Oct. 27.

The email reads: “During this week-long period, the laundry rooms will be inaccessible, and all laundry machines will be out of service. We understand that this may be inconvenient, and we apologize for any disruption this may cause. We recommend planning your laundry needs accordingly and completing any pending laundry before the closure begins.”

At 8 p.m. on Oct. 22, students were finishing their final loads of laundry before the week began, filtering in and out of the rooms.

“Personally, I don’t mind the machines being out for a week if it means they will be improved in the long run,” said resident Rachel Shone. “I say this will be a very good thing if they manage to replace the machines with better ones.”

“It’s quite inconvenient that the machines are out. However, with how much the previous machines broke down, a week will pass by quickly,” said Shone’s roommate, Leyla Cornell.

However, students were worried an accident like spilling a drink might change how quickly the week goes.

Resident Ren Chartrand said he’s looking forward to better machines but is frustrated by the temporary closure.

“I did extra laundry in preparation, and I know afterwards I’ll have to do extra to catch up,” said Chartrand. “Both of these add to my frustration because I’m disabled and living on the fourth floor.”

The maintenance doesn’t leave students completely without laundry options. Residents could always ask a friend to use their machines or go to a laundromat.

The closest laundromat from campus is a 27-minute bus ride to Merivale Coin Laundry on Merivale Road. The business hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with the last load time being 3 p.m.

Students can contact the residence front desk for questions or concerns about the closure.

Pre-service firefighter students pull with community for Epilepsy Ottawa

Stormtroopers and Jedi wove their way through the misty, cold afternoon. A sole bagpiper led a team of kilted strongmen through Lansdowne Park towards the fire trucks. Wonder Woman, Spider-Man […]
Photo: Kerry Slack
Brandon Bedard anchors C Platoon, followed by Kaidyn Kovacic, Ryan Ray, Jack Abbott, and Hope Fawsy.

Stormtroopers and Jedi wove their way through the misty, cold afternoon.

A sole bagpiper led a team of kilted strongmen through Lansdowne Park towards the fire trucks.

Wonder Woman, Spider-Man and superheroes of all varieties limbered up for competition.

Among the curious array of tutus and city officials, representatives from Epilepsy Ottawa meticulously counted the donation totals.

Algonquin College’s C Platoon, consisting of 15 pre-service firefighter students from the Woodroffe campus, showed up in the rain on Oct. 21 ready to move a 12-tonne fire truck 100 feet down Marche Way in support of Epilepsy Ottawa.

C Platoon contributed $2,100 of the over $39,000 raised in a record-setting donation total at this year’s event.

Ottawa Fire Truck Pull
Lansdowne Park
October 21, 2023.
C Platoon celebrates a hard race and a great team-building experience. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

Harley Quesnel, Jordan Valdes-Malecki, Alicia Capello, Brandon Bedard, Carter O’Connor, Ryan Ray, Joey Demelo, Marcel Ahmed, Hope Fawzy, Kaidyn Kovacic, Ethan McCormick, Jack Abbott, Isabella Tourangeau and Leo the puppy came ready to work the crowd and haul some serious weight.

Ottawa Fire Truck Pull
Lansdowne Park
October 21, 2023.
Leo struggles to pose for a shot.
With so many good smells, its hard for a pup to concentrate. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

Abbott, Quesnel, O’Connor and Valdes-Malecki represented Algonquin College in the honorary pull to start the event.

Ottawa Fire Truck Pull
Lansdowne Park
October 21, 2023.
Jack Abbott from Algonquin College's C Platoon leads the honourary team for the first pull of the day. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

Twenty teams of 10 competed in the Ottawa Fire Truck Pull in categories such as most money raised, team spirit and fastest time.

“My legs are done but I think we did well,” said Bedard, who anchored the pull for Algonquin College.

Ottawa Fire Truck Pull
Lansdowne Park
October 21, 2023.
C Platoon pulls hard to begin their race Photo credit: Kerry Slack

Coming in with a time of 30.68 seconds wasn’t enough for the win and although C Platoon had the crowd screaming for the 16th pull of the day, it was rivals La Cité who took the spirit award.

“It’s nice to see the impact it has on the city and how many people are here, involved in this,” said Fawzy.

Algonquin College has a deeper connection to the fire truck pull, which includes the Shawn Mathieson First Responders Challenge.

Shawn Mathieson was a long-time firefighter in Ottawa who was also an Algonquin alumni. He was first in the electrician program then he went on to the fire program.

“Back at that time there was not as much demand for electricians and he (Mathieson) loved helping people so he joined the fire program,” said his wife Carrie Mathieson.

A long-time firefighter Mathieson loved giving back to the community. This was his favorite fundraiser to be a part of.

“Shawn would have been all smiles out here today. He was all about community. He loved this event,” said Mathieson.

Shawn Mathieson was killed in a snowmobile crash on March 3, 2016.

The Ottawa Fire Truck Pull now annually presents the Shawn Mathieson First Responders Challenge in his honour.

The winners of the Shawn Mathieson First Responders Challenge were Team Shrek consisting of 10 first responders, including his best friend Tom Fuller and his wife Carrie.

"Shawn loved this event," said Carrie Mathieson, fourth from the right.
Team Shrek wins the Shawn Mathieson First Responders Challenge. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

“Shawn was a powerful man,” said Fuller. “He could pull that truck by himself.”

Ottawa South MPP John Fraser also helped in the honorary first pull.

“I’m 64, I’m not getting any younger, but it was a lot of fun,” said Fraser.

Fraser commits to showing up for more than the polls and actively engages with as many community events as possible.

“There’s a sense of everybody pulling together, literally,” said Fraser. “It’s a great idea for a fundraiser or I like to call them, ‘friend raisers’ which are not only going to raise funds, but you also raise friends.”

Epilepsy Ottawa helps improve the quality of life for the 10,000 people in the region living with epilepsy and their loved ones through support services, education, advocacy and ongoing public awareness.

Jennifer Smith found support on Epilepsy Ottawa’s Facebook page when her daughter was diagnosed.

Making connections has been integral to her family’s journey within this community.

“I saw them (Epilepsy Ottawa) on Facebook one day and they have a parent group. Now I can talk to other parents so I’m not alone in this anymore,” said Smith.

“My daughter has met other children who have epilepsy so she’s not alone either.”

“The more we talk about it the more open we are about it then the more people that can help. It’s scary to talk about sometimes but a fun event like this it takes all that stigma away,” said Smith.

Although C Platoon didn’t come away with the win they came away with a sense of accomplishment and had fun doing it.

Ottawa Fire Truck Pull
Lansdowne Park
October 21, 2023.
It wasn't all hard work.
Pull team captain Carter O'Connor celebrates with a dance. Photo credit: Kerry Slack

Happy with their contribution, Capello said, “I think it went really well. We pulled strong.”

“We had a really great time as a group,” said Fawzy through deep breaths at the finish line. “Win or lose it was a great team bonding event for us. That’s a win.”

Professor reads erotic poetry at naughty bake sale

Richard Kaulbars, known by his stage name Emerson Lake, gathered a group of comedians and a burlesque dancer to preform with him as he recited his erotic poetry at Stray […]
Photo: Alex Campbell
Emerson Lake reads dirty song lyrics for the crowd at Stray Dog Brewing Company in Orleans on Oct. 20.

Richard Kaulbars, known by his stage name Emerson Lake, gathered a group of comedians and a burlesque dancer to preform with him as he recited his erotic poetry at Stray Dog Brewing Company in Orleans on Oct. 20.

Kaulbars, who is a scriptwriting professor at Algonquin College, has had a successful writing career. Kaulbars wrote for the comedy network for many years, working on shows such as Kevin Spencer, For Better or For Worse and Toad Patrol, the latter being popular in Japan. Kaulbars even won the top prize in a contest by Fade In Magazine for the short film category and won $1,000 and the chance to sit in on their “pitchfest,” where writers gather to pitch ideas to A-list Hollywood producers, representatives and executives. Unfortunately, the actors’ strike has postponed it.

The night was full of laughter, music and moans. Lake, as the interactive host, had participants listen to him read dirty song lyrics and moan when they guessed the song. The winner of the music trivia took home a cake with none other than burlesque dancer Tanya King’s image on top.

Participants could also purchase an assortment of naughty baked goods from the bar including nipple and phallic-shaped lollipops as well as gingerbread men decorated with kinky clothing.

King danced in her burlesque fashion very proudly. A drag performer for eight years and more recently a burlesque performer, she didn’t always find the idea appealing. After living a regular day-to-day life, she wanted more.

“I found this desire in my core to do something artistic,” King said.

She found her artistic calling and drag helped her feel more comfortable being herself.

“Drag was really the critical first part that got me out of the closet,” King said.

Burlesque allowed her to “bask in the sun” after transitioning into a woman, giving her a way to celebrate her femininity without critiquing female gender norms as she felt she was expected to as a drag queen.

Comedians Owen McGowan and Pierre Brault also preformed. McGowan took over for Glenys Marshall after the latter had to back out a short time before the show.

McGowan wasn’t too fond of stand-up but enjoyed an act while going to support a friend who was performing stand-up. “Thought I can do this, I should do this, I want to do it, so I tried my first open mic and I had the time of my life,” McGowan said.

McGowan dropped his opera classes and has been a comedian ever since.

Brault and Kaulbars tried a new sketch out for the first time. Kaulbars, as Lake, wanted to mock anti-LGBT protesters with an SNL-like skit. Brault played an angry protester who was eventually turned over in the end.

“Pierre Brault deserves a lot of credit. He is a guy who plays the NAC and I only know him because I know a lot of actors in town,” Kaulbars said. “He loves comedy.”

Kaulbars has attended many anti-trans protests to join in on the counter-protests. “It’s a party, that’s where the haters meet their Waterloo. They’re there yelling and being mean, and we’re there with Pride mix,” Kaulbars said before imitating the noise of loud music.

He wants his shows to be “transtastic.”

Kaulbars has tried his hand at stand-up comedy as well, although notes it’s a lonely lifestyle.

“I was the youngest of five kids. I loved troupes, I love being in groups that inspire me. Stand-up, I just ended up drinking too much and being lonely,” Kaulbars said. “I wasn’t writing and I wasn’t liking it anymore.”

Kaulbars hopes to expand his performances and have a roster of performers to choose from. He does shows at Bowie’s Music Club in Smiths Falls but is having trouble finding a central stage in Ottawa. On top of that, he is busy being a professor during the day and a father for his children.

Men’s Wolves volleyball team wins home opener against La Cité

The men’s Wolves volleyball team won their first game of the season with a dominating 3-0 win over La Cité Coyotes on Oct. 20. The first set was a blowout […]
Photo: Marco Ghosn
Pras Jeyapalasingham (left) and Mahmoud Abdelaziz (right) jump to block the ball against La Cité at the Jack Doyle Athletics and Recreation Centre on Oct. 20.

The men’s Wolves volleyball team won their first game of the season with a dominating 3-0 win over La Cité Coyotes on Oct. 20.

The first set was a blowout by the Wolves, winning the set 25-11. The second set was more or less the same with a 25-15 win and the third set had another lopsided score of 25-13.

“The first game of the season is always good to get the result. The guys are very happy about it,” said Jelle Kooijman, head coach of the Wolves.

“Me and the guys were kind of saying, did we play at the level we think we can play? No, but it was a really good start and we’re happy to build from here and it gives us confidence going into the rest of the season,” added Kooijman.

Man of the match, Martin Janega, was happy with the win but wants to see more improvement throughout the season.

“I thought we played well; we could’ve played better. Aspects such as serving could’ve been much better. In the end, we kind of just played our game and did what we had to do to take care of business and that’s it,” said Janega.

Connor Finnie jumps to block ball against La Cité at the Jack Doyle Athletics and Recreation Centre on Oct. 20.
Connor Finnie jumps to block ball against La Cité at the Jack Doyle Athletics and Recreation Centre on Oct. 20. Photo credit: Marco Ghosn

Kooijman and the team were very excited to be back and performing in front of the home Algonquin College crowd.

“After a long season, there’s about a week where everyone goes, ‘Man, I’m happy to have some time off,’ and then in the weekend you’re like, I can’t wait for the start of the season, and when the starting announcements start and they announce the starting lineup, it’s the best moment of the week. It’s great to be back,” said Kooijman.

The Wolves will be back in action next week against George Brown at the Jack Doyle Athletics and Recreation Centre on Oct. 28.

First Person: What it’s like to be a ‘nobody’ when war happens

On Feb. 24, 2022, my dad woke me up in our apartment on the 22nd floor. It was a cold murky Saint Petersburg morning. In this northern Russian city, every […]
Photo: Arty Sarkisian
Sometimes history will chew you up and spit you out and you must stand up with a cheery smile and say, “Thank you.”

On Feb. 24, 2022, my dad woke me up in our apartment on the 22nd floor. It was a cold murky Saint Petersburg morning. In this northern Russian city, every morning is cold and murky. “The war has begun,” Dad said. He was both tired and scared. But most importantly, he was disappointed.

For a whole month prior to the 24th, we had been discussing the absolute insanity of all those “alarmists” who were saying that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was inevitable.

We laughed at them. We laughed at them while eating breakfast, while walking in the park or while doing the dishes.

Instead, we led our lives as any “normal” people would have at that time: we worried about transit, groceries, COVID masks and the damn icicles that kept falling from Saint Petersburg roofs.

On the 24th everything fell apart. The “insanes” were right. They had been right to be alarmed. We were wrong. History had killed the life that we had the right to lead.

Today, “normal” people – the kind we’d been before the morning of the 24th – can complain about the bus that arrived late. They can talk about the government that wasted their money or the Internet that is too slow for a Netflix movie. Overall, they have the right to whine.

Those of us who woke up on the morning of the 24th in Russia don’t have that privilege.

We woke up in a chapter of a history book. We joined those in Afghanistan, Iraq and Nagorno-Karabakh whose chapters were well underway. On Oct. 7, 2023 we were joined by Israelis and Palestinians.

So, from now on, every second of our every day must be spent thanking the world, God and, again, history for the fact that we are not dead.

On that morning, when my dad was standing at the door of my room, I heard a siren.

It was not a real siren. At least not to us. It was coming out of TV. The TV that was about to work for 48 hours straight without a break. We were watching Euronews. They were broadcasting from Independence Square in Kyiv. Nothing was happening, there was just a siren.

Occasionally, they would rerun the speech of Russia’s commander-in-chief. Every time this balding old man appeared on the screen, declaring the launch of the “special military operation,” such obscenities would come to my mind that I had never thought I was capable of.

Every Russian-speaking person, especially those of us who were in Russia at the time, has a very similar “24th of February story.” And we all tell it the same way our grandparents used to talk about the day in 1941 when a deep powerful voice of Yuri Levitan declared on the radio, “Moscow’s speaking. The Great Patriotic War of the Soviet people against the Nazi invaders began.”

The only difference is, our grandparents were “the people,” while we are…

Who are we exactly?

Janet Silver has worked as a reporter for several decades. She is one of those people who had the chance to witness the most important historic events of the past and present century. Events that are already “history-book material.”

She witnessed the fall of the Berlin Wall and the military coup in the former Soviet Union. From Toronto, she covered Tiananmen Square.

What would be an “eye-opening” experience for someone who had witnessed so many of those?

The 9/11 attacks were just like that. “Eye-opening.”

Silver was an ABC Australia reporter in Washington, D.C. She remembers the next morning after the attacks.

“Going into work, riding the subway and (there were) literally people sitting there with Qur’ans and Bibles, because they were thinking, ‘Is this The Day?’”

As a journalist, Silver worked in the National Press Building. And she would be evacuated many times, because of endless letter bombs that were delivered.

But really, who cares? Who cares about a journalist, some people in the subway or a young dude on a murky morning who are scared? History is not about the ones that are scared, it’s about the thousands who are dead. The scared must be thankful that they are living.

And we are.

But sometimes history will chew you up and spit you out and you must stand up with a cheery smile and say, “Thank you.”

We should be thankful that it wasn’t our house that was destroyed by a bomb. We should be thankful that we weren’t the ones tortured to death just because someone wanted to torture us to death. We should be thankful that we are witnessing history, unlike others who are no longer alive to recognize their place in it.

After Feb. 24, I thought Russia was united in its hatred towards this “special military operation.” My social media feed was filled with black squares with white hashtags #NoWar.

But it turned out that the people in my bubble, those terrified “non-insanes” were lonely voices in a silent crowd.

For instance, my high school physics teacher, Sergey Antonov, was one of the very few teachers in our school who dared to speak up. “No war!” he wrote in his Instagram under a photo with his wife in Kyiv. “I hate everybody responsible for this.”

Later he had to delete this post. He was still fired and had to emigrate from Russia. Otherwise, he might have been taken to the frontline. To kill or to be killed.

Some of his colleagues emigrated too. Those were the best teachers our school had.

Many of my high school classmates (the most talented ones), who would have otherwise made outstanding careers in Russia, also emigrated. Within months after the 24th, Russia lost thousands of future IT experts, teachers, economists, linguists and many others.

Today, those who stayed, those who are silently waiting for all of this to end, are walking the streets of cities unfriendly to them. Those cities are covered with glorifications of violence: posters, street art and stickers that praise the criminals and slander the victims. They live in the country, where murder is preached from the church pulpits. They hear it from the country they loved, that did not love them back.

But, again, we are all lucky.

My gym teacher, a former military person, was taken to fight in Ukraine. He died near Mariupol on Oct. 5, 2022. His name was Vadim Yurievich Sedov.

Our siren on the 24th wasn’t real, but we saw its consequences.

The “special military operation” has now been going on for almost two years. Within the first month, our Euronews channel in Saint Petersburg was blocked “for fakes about the Russian military.”

Today, I wake up in a two-storey townhouse in east-end Ottawa. Mornings can still be cold and murky.

So again, who am I? Who are we? We are those, whose grandparents fought against oppression and tyranny. Those who do not accept oppression and tyranny. Those who are alive and relatively safe.

We are nobody. Not victims, nor aggressors. We are leftovers. We are those whom books will deem insignificant.

Algonquin Times podcast
Algonquin Times podcast

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